Let's go ahead and get it out of the way right away: The new Nye's is not the old Nye's, the one that so many of you loved and remember so well despite all the nights you forgot or would rather forget there.
That Nye's is dead. It had a long goodbye 20 months ago. Some people cried. A lot of people sang. Many more tried to sing who couldn't. It was beautiful. And it was final.
That hard truth seemed to be accepted or at least buried deep beneath a broad smile by everyone who passed under the new neon Nye's sign Wednesday night, when a preview party was held ahead of the official opening Thursday at 4 p.m.
"Weren't we just here?" singer/pianist Daina De Prez cackled from behind the new, uncannily polished circular piano bar at the far end of the club — the same corner where musicians used to have to step aside for patrons to get to the men's room. Not anymore.
"Wait till you see the new bathrooms," De Prez added, not joking this time.
Housed in the oldest and smallest of the four buildings that made up the old 1950s-era Nye's complex — the original century-old corner bar that became the polka room at 112 E. Hennepin Av. — the new Nye's is basically just a skeletal remnant of the old lounge.
"Structurally, the brick walls are about all that's left," said co-owner Rob Jacob, who let out a pained laugh explaining how even the floor had to be replaced: "When we ripped it up, there were four other floors under it."
But Rob and his brother, Tony Jacob, did bring back numerous visual nods to the old Nye's. They consider them "tributes." Their naysayers might see them more as opportunistic piggybacking.